What is a Manual
Transmission?
Manual transmissions work
by use of a clutch that connects the engine flywheel to
the transmission input shaft - the input shaft of the
transmission therefore turns at the same rpm as the
engine. To understand the basic idea behind a standard
transmission, the diagram below shows a very simple
two-speed transmission in neutral:

The green shaft comes
from the engine through the clutch. The green shaft and
green gear are connected as a single unit. (The clutch
is a device that lets you connect and disconnect the
engine and the transmission. When you push in the clutch
pedal, the engine and the transmission are disconnected
so the engine can run even if the car is standing still.
When you release the clutch pedal, the engine and the
green shaft are directly connected to one another. The
green shaft and gear turn at the same rpm as the
engine.)
The red shaft and gears
are called the layshaft. These are also connected as a
single piece, so all of the gears on the layshaft and
the layshaft itself spin as one unit. The green shaft
and the red shaft are directly connected through their
meshed gears so that if the green shaft is spinning, so
is the red shaft. In this way, the layshaft receives its
power directly from the engine whenever the clutch is
engaged.
The yellow shaft is a
splined shaft that connects directly to the drive shaft
through the differential to the drive wheels of the car.
If the wheels are spinning, the yellow shaft is
spinning.
The blue gears ride on
bearings, so they spin on the yellow shaft. If the
engine is off but the car is coasting, the yellow shaft
can turn inside the blue gears while the blue gears and
the layshaft are motionless.
The purpose of the collar
is to connect one of the two blue gears to the yellow
drive shaft. The collar is connected, through the
splines, directly to the yellow shaft and spins with the
yellow shaft. However, the collar can slide left or
right along the yellow shaft to engage either of the
blue gears. Teeth on the collar, called dog teeth, fit
into holes on the sides of the blue gears to engage
them.
When the collar is
between the two gears (as shown in the first figure),
the transmission is in neutral. Both of the blue gears
freewheel on the yellow shaft at the different rates
controlled by their ratios to the layshaft.
From this simple
overview, you can answer several questions:
1) When you make a
mistake while shifting and hear a horrible grinding
sound, you are not hearing the sound of gear teeth mis-meshing.
As you can see in these diagrams, all gear teeth are all
fully meshed at all times. The grinding is the sound of
the dog teeth trying unsuccessfully to engage the holes
in the side of a blue gear.
2) The transmission shown
here does not have "synchros" so if you were using this
transmission you would have to double-clutch* it. Manual
transmissions in modern passenger cars use synchronizers
to eliminate the need for double-clutching. A synchro's
purpose is to allow the collar and the gear to make
frictional contact before the dog teeth make contact.
This lets the collar and the gear synchronize their
speeds before the teeth need to engage. The cone on one
gear fits into the cone-shaped area in the collar, and
friction between the cone and the collar synchronize the
collar and the gear. The outer portion of the collar
then slides so that the dog teeth can engage the gear.
3) You can also see how a
small linear motion in the gear shift knob allows you to
change gears. The gear shift knob moves a rod connected
to the fork. The fork slides the collar on the yellow
shaft to engage one of two gears.
*Double-clutching was
common in older cars and is still common in some modern
race cars. In double-clutching, you first push the
clutch pedal in once to disengage the engine from the
transmission. This takes the pressure off the dog teeth
so you can move the collar into neutral. Then you
release the clutch pedal and rev the engine to the
"right speed." The right speed is the rpm value at which
the engine should be running in the next gear. The idea
is to get the blue gear of the next gear and the collar
rotating at the same speed so that the dog teeth can
engage. Then you push the clutch pedal in again and lock
the collar into the new gear. At every gear change you
have to press and release the clutch twice, hence the
name "double-clutching."